Effect of silence duration in intervocalic velar plosive on voicing perception for normal and hearing-impaired subjects

1991 
For normally hearing subjects shortening the silence duration of an intervocalic voiceless plosive induces a misperception of voicing. The time boundary for this effect is about 60 ms, which corresponds to a possible forward masking effect at the frequency of voicing. If recovery from masking is indeed involved, hearing-impaired subjects, who may have prolonged forward masking, can be expected to show abnormally long time boundary for voicing misperception. This study investigated the perception of voicing of an intervocalic plosive for a natural speech sample “aka” as a function of occlusive silence duration for normally hearing and hearing-impaired subjects. To investigate a correlation with forward masking, a second test was performed on the subjects. The same first a of the “aka” was selected and at its end was concatenated a voice murmur taken from an “aga” elocution from the same speaker, and the minimum duration of the voiced murmur necessary for it to be perceived was measured. About half of the h...
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